Search form

Stay in touch

Our democracy has a big money problem.

Wealthy donors have always had an outsized influence in our democracy, but misguided jurisprudence, like the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision, has opened the floodgates for mega donations and corporate spending in our elections.

Spending on political races has skyrocketed, and running for office has never been more expensive. The 2016 election cycle was the most expensive in U.S. history with almost $6.5 billion spent. As a result, unless candidates are independently wealthy, they often need to court contributions from mega-donors or corporate interests to be competitive in their races.

This gives a very small number of people massive influence on who runs for office and, often, what issues they decide to talk about. In 2016, fewer than 400 families gave more than half of all of the money raised in the presidential race. That’s not how our democracy is supposed to work. Our democracy is supposed to be based on the principle of one person, one vote.

Ultimately, we need to overturn Citizens United and make other systemic changes if we want to get big money out of our elections. But large-scale changes like these take time, public pressure, and elected leaders who are committed to making it happen. That’s why we’re researching and advocating for small donor empowerment programs, that will bring power back to the people.

These programs match contributions of ordinary people with public funds. Candidates access these funds when they opt into the program and refuse to take large and corporate contributions. This means anyone with enough public support can run for office, those candidates can raise enough money to be competitive, and they will be answerable to their constituents, not a handful of mega-donors and corporations.

California has already instituted small donor programs at the municipal level in some cities and counties. It’s one of 29 states, cities, and counties across the country with small donor matching systems. These programs match funds for a variety of different elected offices. But we’re working to make small donor empowerment programs statewide.

State By State, City By City

Small donor programs are working. New York City has been using a system like this for decades. And recently, our national network helped to pass small donor empowerment programs in Seattle, Maine, Washington, D.C., and Maryland’s Montgomery, Prince George's and Howard counties, and our national partners are building on this momentum by working to pass statewide bills in Oregon and Maryland.

We're starting small. Passing small donor programs at the municipal and county levels is a key step to making big change. First, it elects people to office who know firsthand that small donor systems work — people who can go on to become champions of reform in city halls, statehouses and in Washington, D.C. Second, it builds a base of campaign workers, volunteers and voters who have renewed faith in our democracy. Utilizing this approach here at home, combined with the nationwide efforts of our coalition, will help build enough support to pass more state reforms, and ultimately build momentum for the Government By The People Act — a bill that would empower small donors in federal elections.

We can do this. Our organization's research, advocacy and organizing have helped highlight the problems that stem from having big money influence our elections. Our national network's work on the ground helped 16 states and more than 650 communities take a stand against Citizens United — on the record. Our coalition partners mobilized voters to help win transformative reforms on the ballot that empower small donors in Maine and Seattle, and their efforts helped win the passage of small donor legislation in Washington, D.C., and in Montgomery County, Prince George's County and Howard County, Maryland.

GET INVOLVED

Get Consumer Alerts

If you haven’t, sign up for our alerts, so you can stay up to date with the latest campaign developments. And please consider supporting the research, advocacy and organizing that it takes to continue pushing for change.